Authors: Van Jones
As a result, the very idea of the American Dream has become a cruel joke to millions who are working harder than ever and falling further behind. In an October 6, 2011, article entitled “Flat-lining the Middle Class: Economic Numbers to Die For,” Andy Kroll reported on
TomDispatch.com
: “In 2010, the average middle-class family took home $49,445, a drop of $3,719 or 7 percent, in yearly earnings from ten years earlier. In other words, that family now earns the same amount as in 1996. After peaking in 1999, middle-class income dwindled through the early years of the George W. Bush presidency, climbing briefly during the housing boom, then nose-diving in its aftermath.”
America once was a country in which we believed that those who worked hard and played by the rules should be able to advance. But the worst of the top 1 percent have turned that old formula upside down. Too many people on Main Street (let alone the back roads, alleys, and side streets) are finding today that they cannot succeedâno matter how hard they work, and no matter how scrupulously they follow the rules. At the same time, other Americans, including the worst of Wall Street, apparently cannot failâno matter how inept, corrupt, or lazy they are, and no matter how many times they break the rules.
Someone has already decided that they are “too big” to fail.
The time has come to turn things right side up again and declare that America's honest, hard-working middle class is too big to fail. The aspirations of our low-income, struggling, and marginalized communities are too big and important to fail. The hopes of our children are too big to fail. The American Dream itself is too big to fail.
And we are not going to let these things fail.
Of course, it will not be easy to stop the dream killers. Tax policy that burdens working families and gives the biggest breaks to the super-rich has helped to keep more and more of our national wealth locked in the private safes of the top 1 percent. This alarming economic polarization, combined with the constant flow of good-paying jobs overseas, threatens to end our status as a middle-class nation. Too many of our big banks and largest corporations are behaving in a manner that is both irresponsible and unpatriotic. Their conduct makes it that much worse for the many patriotic and responsible businessesâespecially small businessesâthat follow the rules and provide good jobs to their employees.
Additionally, many well-intentioned people have been recruited into a powerful crusadeâthe Tea Party movementâthat promises the American people economic relief by slashing taxes and taking a wrecking ball to America's government. The impact of the Tea Party's reckless policies would be to financially decimate our government, further dismantle America's middle class, and strengthen the chokehold that the top 1 percent has on the economy. Nonetheless, the Tea Partiers effectively seized the public narrative in 2009 and congressional power in 2010, quelling the wave of hope generated by the 2008 election. They have succeeded at painting their agenda “red, white, and blue.” If we are to have an economy that works for the remaining 99 percent, this kind of “cheap patriotism” must be sidelined in favor of a
“deep patriotism”âone that honors the accomplishments of our parents and grandparents. After all, they used the tools of both free enterprise and democratic government to build a society that sets the global standard.
Fortunately, a new force has emerged with the long-term potential to both repair America's democracy and renew the American Dream. A massive protest movement has risen within the United States, eclipsing the Tea Party. It aims to fix our political system, heal our economy, and end Wall Street's tyranny over our lives. The outcome of the battle remains uncertain, but the highly anticipated “fight back” in America has begun. It's about time.
Corporate America's millions of casualties are beginning to find their voices, stand together, and fight backâagainst joblessness, homelessness, and despair. The destruction of America's middle class is meeting with angry opposition in the streets. The protest wave began in February 2011. It was powered by public fury over union-busting legislation proposed by Tea Party governors in Wisconsin and Ohio. It grew throughout the spring, as students mobilized to oppose tuition hikes, and foreclosure victims resisted evictions. In the summer of 2011, hundreds of thousands took to the streets in every U.S. congressional district to rally against devastating budget cuts under the slogans “Jobs Not Cuts” and “Save the American Dream.”
Then, on September 17, a few hundred activists calling themselves Occupy Wall Street pitched their tents in Manhattan's financial district. Their daring tactic captured the imagination of millions in America. The boldness of their action ignited a passion for change in hundreds of other cities in the United States and
around the world. The tiny spark that was struck in the Wisconsin winter became a national and even global prairie fire by the end of the year.
Most importantly, in a country that has been divided along so many lines of color and economic condition, the Occupy Wall Street protesters created a new identity that can include and unite the vast majority of Americans. Their simple sloganâ“We Are the 99%!”âis now the rallying cry for everyone who is struggling against an economy that enriches the few at the expense of the many. That rallying call is meant to underscore the ways in which the nation's economy is failing everyoneâexcept the very top 1 percent. It is intended to empower members of America's super-majority to understand ourselves as having a shared plight, a common cause, and enough power to change things.
There is reason for hope. The United States remains a rich nationâthe wealthiest and most inventive in the history of the world. Global competition and technological advances pose challenges for American workers, but we should always remember that the proverbial pie is bigger than ever todayâand still growing. As a nation, we are getting richer; our GDP is still greater than it has ever been. The problem is not that the pie is shrinking; it is that working families are taking home smaller slices of it, as wealth and income are concentrated upward. It will take smart policy, better business practices, and community-driven innovation, but we still have the power to reclaim, reinvent, and renew the American Dream.
The growing movement faces three important challenges:
⢠To transform some of its protest energy into electoral power;
⢠To shift from expressing anger to providing answers; and
⢠To balance confrontation with aspiration and inspiration.
At this pivotal moment in history, we can make our economy respect the 99% and work for the 100%. To do so, we must develop and promote serious solutions that fit the scale of the problems that the protests of 2011 highlighted.
This book proposes some.
America is still the best idea in the world. The American middle class is still her greatest invention. This book is dedicated to the proposition thatâwith the right strategy and a little bit of luckâthe movement of the 99% can preserve and strengthen them both.
BEFORE I SHARE MY OWN OBSERVATIONS
and suggestions, let me declareâup frontâa few biases and convictions.
First, I believe in both electoral politics and peaceful protest; they are two blades of a scissor, and both are needed to make real change. Some see marches, sit-ins, and public demonstrations as unruly, scary, or out of fashionâso they reject protests. Others think our democracy is so corrupted by big money and media madness that participation is beneath themâso they reject electoral politics. I believe that progress is made from the bottom up
and
from the top down. Therefore, I believe that nonviolent direct action and smart voting are the twin keys to meaningful change.
Second, I am no longer the anticapitalist firebrand of my youth: to fix our current problems, American communities will need investment, invention, and innovation. That is mainly the task and role of a robust private sector. This book focuses on the need for good legislation, in hopes that better-regulated markets can fix the problems that badly regulated markets caused. What we know is this: there are tens of thousands of socially responsible entrepreneurs out there, trying to bring forward the good jobs,
enterprises, and industries of the twenty-first century. Our government should be a partner to these emerging problem-solvers in the U.S. economy, not the old problem-makers.
Finally, I am personally committed to America's success. The reasons are deeply personal. I know America very wellâgood, bad, and otherwise. My family has lived on these shores for unknowable generationsâthrough our enslavement, through a century of Jim Crow terror, through the Civil Rights Movement, and into these challenging times. By way of my Native American ancestors, I can claim roots that go back millennia, right here on these lands. My blood is mixed with the soil. Just by leafing through the pages of my family photo albums, one can see all of the joy and pain that is our country. The stolen land and stolen labor that helped build this nation are a part of my heritage. So is the heroic effort by which Americans started smashing down old barriers, healing ancient old hurts, andâin Dr. King's wordsâmaking real the promises of democracy.
I believe in the possibilities of the American Dreamâin part, because the dream of equal opportunity sustained my ancestors. As a proud son of Americaâand as the proud father of American sonsâI have a duty to continue the work of helping to make an America “as good as its promise.”
IN MY VIEW, A MOVEMENT
that believes itself to be the 99% at war with the 1% cannot succeed in Americaânor should it. But a movement that is the 99%-for-the-100% in America cannot fail. This book is intended to help those courageous enough to stand with the embattled 99%âwhile holding out a dream that is big enough to move the 100%.
Â
F
OR MILLIONS OF PEOPLE THE THRILL
of seeing Barack Obama beat the odds to become president of the United States was one of most exciting and uplifting experiences of our lives. The feelings of joy, hope, and anticipation were heady and unforgettable. But did Barack Obama alone create the hope that so many of us felt in 2008? The assumption that he did is sensible. He is a brilliant man and a gifted orator, who emerged as the perfect counterpoint and antidote to President George W. Bush. Candidate Obama gave Americans the opportunity for a much-needed reset. Today he is still among the world's most admired and beloved leaders. Barely out of his forties, he has inspired hundreds of millions of people, both in the United States and around the world.
What, or who, inspired Obama? From what source did he draw the courageâand the audacityâto run for the highest office in the land, as a freshman senator from Illinois? He said in 2004 that he had no intention of running for president in 2008. What changed his mind? What shifted in America that altered his thinking about the
possibilities he saw for himselfâand for the country? To answer these questions, one has to look beyond the time frame of the 2008 campaign and examine the rising political and social movements that predatedâand in fact prefiguredâObama's historic bid.
Sober analysis makes it clear: the movement for “hope and change”âin all its multiracial, tech-savvy, people-powered promiseâdid not originate inside the 2008 Obama for America campaign, nor did it arise fully formed out of the snows of the Iowa caucuses. Key precursors were well established before Obama ever declared his intention to run. Obama's campaign helped to crystallize an emerging “hope and change” movement, giving it language, symbolism, form, and a visible champion. In fact, the movement predated the 2008 electoral season altogetherâby at least five years.